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February 12-13 Storm, Part II


stormtracker

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This is the 0z Euro when you account for mixing and low snow ratios. It's night and day compared to 10:1 maps. 

attachicon.gifEURO Snowfall.png

Seems a bit underdone from all other outputs. There was a panel that had surface slightly (<1*C) above freezing, but it was during heavy precip and cold upstairs (-4 at 850).  Is there significant warming elsewhere in the column? I know earlier runs had an onshore flow around the 900-950mb layer.

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The newest headline for the LWX AFD just sent a chill up my spine, though that was probably stronger wording than I would use. 

 

 

They do a great job of highlighting the mix potential near and east of 95, but are sure to mention that significant snow accumulations are likely regardless of what happens.  

NWS may not be overstating their case for a crippling winter storm hitting the LWX region. This snow will be wet. Twelve inches of wet snow will do a lot of damage, including bringing down a lot of branches and snapping trees off as well as creating a major travel headache in Washington and all over Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania and Delaware as well as in the Carolinas where 14 inches are expected in Charlotte and up to an inch and a quarter of ICE in central South Carolina.

 

I'd say THAT qualifies as 'crippling'

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I think maybe we are at a point where we can stop worrying about the GFS when every other piece of guidance is locking in. Coastal referenced this on the radio show last night, and others have on here, but that historic snow mauling that Boston got last Feb. 8 was one the Euro was on early, and the GFS really never quite caught onto. For whatever reason, maybe this kind of set-up isn't one it can handle as well as the other pieces of guidance with respect to the surface features. 

 

Or, it's on to something.

 

At this point, the former seems far more likely. 

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Gfs

Two of the best Mets on this forum were on the radio \saying that the GFS didnt really look right... Wes has been on the Euro's side for the last 48 hours (or more).  You know as well as I do that that it is big deal when Wes goes big.. I know... I want the GFS to just just show it.. but for now... just be happy that the best model in the world has been giving you like two feet of snow for like the past 50 model runs.. jeez ji... come on now.. 

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DCA:

THU 00Z 13-FEB  -2.9    -6.3    1026      62      71    0.00     555     534    THU 06Z 13-FEB  -3.0    -2.9    1018      90      98    0.22     552     538    THU 12Z 13-FEB  -0.2    -1.3    1007      91      99    0.57     548     542    THU 18Z 13-FEB   0.1    -3.3     995      87      96    0.34     537     540    FRI 00Z 14-FEB   1.2    -3.6     996      89      97    0.62     532     535    FRI 06Z 14-FEB  -0.9    -2.1    1001      69      23    0.08     535     534    

If this verifies I may change my screen name to -3.6 996 0.62

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For posterity (and because I think it's a really solid discussion from the LWX desk):

 

SIGNIFICANT TO PERHAPS EVEN A CRIPPLING WINTER STORM WILL IMPACT THE
AREA WEDNESDAY NIGHT AND THURSDAY.

HIGH PRESSURE OVER NEW ENGLAND WILL CONTINUE TO FUNNEL COLD AIR INTO
THE AREA. COASTAL LOW PRESSURE JUST OFF THE SOUTHEAST COAST
WEDNESDAY EVENING WILL INTENSIFY AS THE NORTHERN AND SOUTHERN BRANCH
OF THE JET PHASE TOGETHER DURING THIS TIME. WARM AND MOIST AIR WILL
OVERRUN THE LOW-LEVEL COLD AIR IN PLACE...CAUSING SNOW TO BREAK OUT
FROM SOUTH TO NORTH WEDNESDAY EVENING. THE LOW WILL PASS BY TO OUR
EAST LATE WEDNESDAY NIGHT AND THURSDAY. THE UPPER-LEVEL LOW
ASSOCIATED WITH THE COASTAL LOW WILL TRACK THROUGH OUR AREA DURING
THIS TIME. THE FORCING FROM THE UPPER-LEVEL LOW COMBINED WITH
OVERRUNNING AND A STRENGTHENING LOW-LEVEL JET WILL CAUSE MODERATE TO
HEAVY PRECIPITATION ACROSS THE AREA. MOST OF THE PRECIPITATION WILL
BE IN THE FORM OF SNOW. HOWEVER...THERE MAY BE ENOUGH WARM AIR FOR
MIXED SNOW AND SLEET NEAR AND EAST OF INTERSTATE 95 WITH EVEN RAIN
ACROSS EXTREME SOUTHERN MARYLAND.

SIGNIFICANT SNOW ACCUMULATIONS ARE EXPECTED FOR MOST OF THE AREA
DURING THIS TIME. HOWEVER...THERE ARE STILL SOME UNCERTAINTIES. SOME
GUIDANCE ALLOWS THE NORTHERN AND SOUTHERN STREAM SYSTEMS TO
INTENSIFY QUICKLY...WHICH CAUSES THE LOW TO BE MUCH STRONGER AND
CLOSER TO THE COAST. IF THIS SCENARIO OCCURS...THEN PRECIPITATION
WILL BE HEAVY AND HEAVY SNOWFALL ACCUMULATIONS WOULD OCCUR ACROSS
MUCH OF THE AREA. OTHER GUIDANCE PHASES THE NORTHERN AND SOUTHERN
BRANCH OF THE JET LATER...CAUSING THE LOW TO BE A LITTLE WEAKER AS
IT PASSES BY TO OUR EAST. SIGNIFICANT SNOWFALL ACCUMULATIONS WOULD
STILL OCCUR WITH THIS SCENARIO FOR MUCH OF THE AREA...BUT SNOWFALL
WILL NOT BE AS HEAVY AS FIRST SCENARIO. ALSO...THE GRADIENT BETWEEN
SIGNIFICANT SNOW AND LITTLE SNOW WILL BE CLOSE TO WESTERN MARYLAND
AND EASTERN WEST VIRGINIA.

THE WINTER STORM WATCH CONTINUES FOR THE ENTIRE FORECAST AREA FOR
THE POTENTIAL OF FIVE OR MORE INCHES OF SNOW. STAY TUNED TO THE
LATEST FORECASTS FOR UPDATES REGARDING THIS STORM.

 

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